![]() They have very different voices, and they stay true to themselves throughout. They are both fully fleshed, well-rounded, and unique. Finn is stable and solid, Mark vulnerable and lost, but they fit. Mark and Finn couldn’t be more different. He brings with him playgrounds, toys, Cheesecake Factory and a whole load of pure feels. Lonnie is adorable and as four-year-old as can be. Sometimes they can come across too sickly-sweet, but this time he’s got it spot on. The author has a talent for writing children. But the intersection of Mark’s past and a string of local robberies threatens to upend the small family they are just starting to build and could give Mark’s parents the ammunition they need to destroy everything. Along the way, the two men grow closer as they realize that what they both have always wanted is now in reach. He’s hoping for a new start in a new town with a new job, but with his parents threatening to try to take his son, nothing is easy.įinn takes Mark in and helps him get his life back on track. Finn is the one friend he knows he can count on for a temporary place to stay, and possibly more. He managed to get out of Chicago with his freedom and his son, Lonnie, and needs help. Mark Wallace hasn’t had the best luck in life. ![]() ![]() ![]() The last thing he expects is for a near-disastrous car chase through town to bring him in contact with Mark, the one who got away. Past relationships have largely been heartbreaking, so he keeps to himself. Police officer Finnigan Pettaprin’s life is his job. ![]()
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